That's part of the league and always will be, to some degree. Coaches are hired to be fired. They know that.

But what happened between Jason Kidd, the Milwaukee Bucks and Larry Drew is a different scenario — a coach with a job (Kidd with the Brooklyn Nets) going after a job that is not open (Drew with the Bucks). What is the reaction when a fellow coach is the reason for another coach's firing?

One person intimately involved with coaching searches and hires said actively pursuing a job that isn't available is something you simply don't do. The person requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the Bucks transactions. The person also said it's fine to do due diligence about a job that could open but that's as far it should go.

That's why ESPN/ABC analyst and former NBA coach Jeff Van Gundy declines to address coaching jobs where his name has been mentioned. He doesn't like when his name is mentioned for a job that is already taken, thinking it is disrespectful and a disservice to the current coach.

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Byron Scott was hired by the Lakers after being fired a year ago by the Cavaliers. Scott, a great player for the Lakers in the 1980s and 1990s, has a 416-521 career record with three teams (Cleveland, New Orleans and New Jersey).
Brett Davis, USA TODAY Sports

The Cavaliers hired David Blatt, a veteran European coach with no NBA experience. Blatt last coached Maccabi Tel Aviv but also has coached the Russian national team and other teams in Israel, Russia, Greece, Italy and Turkey.
Guiseppe Cacace, AFP/Getty Images

Flip Saunders already was the Timberwolves' president of basketball operations, but after not landing the head coach he wanted, he'll take that job, too. Saunders has a 638-526 career record.
Richard Sennott, AP

Steve Kerr will get his first coaching experience with the Warriors, who hired him to replace Mark Jackson. Kerr was general manager of the Suns from 2007 through 2010.
Robert Hanashiro, USA TODAY Sport

John Loyer may still have a job with the Pistons, but the interim head coach tag is no longer his. Loyer went 8-24 after taking over for Maurice Cheeks but will be replaced by Stan Van Gundy.
Tim Fuller, USA TODAY Sports

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It's why he declined to call a Knicks game earlier this season when his name was mentioned as possible replacement for Mike Woodson — when Woodson still was the coach.

Bottom line: Van Gundy is sensitive to a difficult and unstable job and has respect for the people doing it. There are only 30 of them and when open, they are in high demand. If a job is open, maybe Van Gundy will listen but he doesn't want to be known as a guy going after taken jobs. It's a bad look.

Dallas Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle is in a unique position. He coached Kidd, considers him a friend but is also president of the NBA Coaches Association. In a text message to USA TODAY Sports, Carlisle played it down the middle.

"This is a byproduct of a dynamic and highly competitive multibillion dollar business," Carlisle said. "We view this as an aberrational transaction between two teams that is unlikely to happen again soon."

What did Larry Drew ever do to anybody?? Look Owners can hire n fire whoever they want, in this case, BAD BUSINESS!

Maybe he's right. It was unusual. Kidd wanted more power in Brooklyn, didn't get it and had the connections in Milwaukee with new owner Marc Lasry to get the Bucks job. Messy as it was — the Bucks owners are to blame for missteps — it was over quickly. The new owners also apologized to Larry Drew, who will be without a job but will receive a buyout payment.

It can be argued the Lasry and Wesley Edens are doing what they think is best for Bucks and trying to lift the franchise out of the rut it has been. They want more than the eighth seed and first-round playoff exit.

They have resources and want to use them on the Bucks, and they just drafted Jabari Parker with the No. 2 overall pick. If this had gone smoother, maybe the Bucks would be receiving compliments for landing Kidd and Parker and starting a new era of Bucks basketball with promise.

As for Kidd, he has work to do — not only with the Bucks, but also with other coaches, some of whom might not be thrilled that one coach lost a job in Kidd's power play.